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Current Trends and Challenges in RFID 230 in (Vuza et al., 2009) for FDX load modulation and have to be discussed again in the HDX setting, since transients manifest themselves when the tag changes the frequency and may have deleterious effects on data integrity if their duration is too long. The results obtained here are compared with those previously obtained for FDX and recommendations for reader design are drawn. In section 5 we expose the principle of low coupling approximation that allows, in the case of low coupling between tag and reader antenna which is usually the case in real situations, to replace the tag with a voltage source in series with the reader antenna for the purpose of circuit analysis. We will make use of this principle in the analysis of transients and of the procedure of bit equalization. Because the reader antenna circuit is tuned to the nominal frequency f C , the two signaling frequencies used by the tag may induce voltages in the reader circuits whose amplitudes differ in a significant way. Such an inequality in amplification may increase the probability of bit error, especially at higher reading distances when the signal is weak. We present in section 7 a method for equalizing the bit amplification based on the one-pole model of the opamp and the related gain-bandwidth product, which does not require any additional component in order to achieve the required effect. The material discussed so far has emphasized the importance of the correct choice of the components in the antenna and amplifier circuits in order to ensure that the duration of transients agrees with the bit time and that equalization of bit amplification is achieved as much as possible. The choice is to be made in the design phase and fine-tuning will be needed in the test phase. Both mentioned phenomena are connected to the transitions between the two signaling frequencies employed by the tag. One needs therefore means for generating such transitions in a reproducible and convenient way. Using real tags for testing does not provide the most convenient way. Observing the frequency transition is not easy on a scope, as the frequency difference is rather small. The transition is gradual because of transients, making difficult to estimate when the transition actually started. For this reason it is preferably to rely on simulators. In section 8 we propose a hardware tag simulator for tuning and testing. In order to be able to estimate the parameters of transients, it is necessary to know precisely the moment of transition onset, which cannot be deduced from the gradual system response. The simulator provides the means for generating transitions together with a signal for the transition onset that can be used as a trigger for the scope on which the system response is recorded. The transient is hidden in the signal and only its negative effects on the latter are immediately visible. Displaying the transient itself require an indirect method. We propose in section 9 two such methods aiming at providing a graphical display of transients, allowing thus to estimate their parameters such as duration and magnitude and to assess their effects on the received signal: a software simulation procedure based on PSpice, which can be used in the design phase, and a method based on the usage of the simulator that can be used in the testing and tuning phases. 2. Voltage-driven and current-driven readers for FDX tags A voltage-driven reader (figure 1) powers the antenna with an AC voltage of constant amplitude at a carrier frequency f C of 125 KHz or 134.2 KHz. The FDX tag transmits data by opening and closing the switch SW, which, due to the magnetic coupling M, modulates the current through the antenna. The variation of the current antenna causes the variation of the voltage V TAP at the tap point (the junction between the antenna coil and the tuning RFID Readers for the HDX Protocol - A Designer’s Perspective 231 capacitor). The reader senses the latter voltage and extracts the baseband signal that contains the data. Fig. 1.Voltage-driven reader A current-driven reader (figure 2) powers the antenna with an AC current of constant amplitude. Again, the FDX tag transmits data by opening and closing the switch SW, which this time modulates the voltage across the whole antenna circuit. The reader extracts the data from the latter voltage, the tap point connection being not needed in this case. Fig. 2. Current-driven reader It is to be observed that for the voltage-driven reader, the drivers that provide the amplified voltage to the antenna can be set into high Z mode via the tristate input during the interval when the antenna is not driven. This will be of importance for the extension to HDX tags. The high Z mode is implicit for the current-driven reader, as the (near) ideal current source presents high impedance to the antenna. The formulas to be presented in the next sections are derived from the following general circuit model of the interaction between reader and tag. Fig. 3. Model of coupling reader-tag Current Trends and Challenges in RFID 232 Consider the circuit of figure 3, in which the two coils are linked by the magnetic coupling 12 M kLL . Let I 1 be the current sourced by voltage source V 1 and let I 2 be the current flowing into impedance Z 2 . Elementary circuit analysis gives the results below, in which s denotes the Laplace variable. 221 1 22 1122 12 ()() () , ()() Ls Z V s Is Ls Z Ls Z kLLs    (1) 12 2 22 1122 12 () () . ()() kLLsVs Is Ls Z Ls Z kLLs   (2) 3. Adding the HDX protocol to the FDX voltage-driven reader In FDX, the tag is continuously powered by the reader and transmits data by load modulation. In HDX, the tag is first charged by an RF pulse of limited duration from the reader, and then it transmits the data using the energy stored during the first step. The tag drives its coil with an AC voltage whose frequency toggles between two values: according to the standard (International Organization for Standardization, 2007), each data bit comprises 16 cycles of the AC voltage, the nominal frequency f C = 134.2 KHz being used for a zero bit and the frequency f LOW = 123.7 KHz for a one bit. For the voltage-driven reader (figures 4, 5) we consider the usage of a dedicated integrated circuit (IC) such as TMS3705 produced by Texas Instruments (Texas Instruments, 2003). The manufacturer provided the IC with its own antenna drivers so that a minimal design of an HDX reader could consist of only the IC and a micro-controller. However, in our design we continue to use the drivers of the existing reader in order to keep the FDX functionality. In Fig. 4. Adding the HDX protocol to the voltage-driven reader the schematic of figure 4, we first observe the MOS transistor M S with low on-resistance that is used as a switch. When the reader is used in FDX mode, M S is cut off allowing the antenna to be powered by the reader drivers. The same is true during the charge phase of the communication with an HDX tag. After the charge phase, the reader stops driving the RFID Readers for the HDX Protocol - A Designer’s Perspective 233 antenna and the drivers are tristated. The reader micro-controller (uC) then turns on M S , establishing thus a low resistance path through which the antenna circuit is closed. The resistor R A includes the AC resistance of the antenna as well as any additional resistor added in order to limit the antenna current and to damp the transients during transmission/reception; more on this topic in the next section. There is a resistor R MS in series with M S , the role of which will also be explained later. It is to be observed that only positive voltages are present at the drain of M S when cut off, which avoids any unwanted conduction through the parasitic diode of the transistor, represented here explicitly in parallel with the latter. Fig. 5. The voltage-driven FDX reader produced by Frosch Electronics (left) and the reader with the plug-in for the HDX extension (right). The tag starts the transmission a short delay after the interruption of the power flow from the reader. Meanwhile the uC has informed the decoder IC via the command line that a new decoding cycle is to begin. In our schematic, the tag is represented as a voltage source V T with output impedance Z T that drives the tag coil L T . The voltage source produces an AC voltage of constant amplitude whose frequency toggles between the nominal frequency f C to which the reader antenna is tuned and the frequency f LOW . The current in the tag coil induces a frequency-modulated voltage in the reader antenna circuit that is sensed at the tap point by the decoder IC. The tap voltage is amplified by an opamp internal to the IC, which is part of an inverting amplifier configuration together with two external resistors provided by the user. The IC extracts the bit information from the frequency modulation and transmits it serially to uC via the data line. 4. Effect of transients on data reception The effect of transients for the FDX protocol has been discussed in (Vuza et al., 2009). A similar analysis may be carried for the HDX protocol. Consider a circuit described by the linear system () () () dX t SX t Y t dt  (3) where X(t) is the state vector and Y(t) is a periodic input. In most cases we may assume that Y is continuous but we may also allow for a discontinuous input such as a square wave. In Current Trends and Challenges in RFID 234 the latter case we shall assume that Y is integrable on each finite interval, that X is continuous and almost everywhere derivable, and that (3) holds almost everywhere; the periodicity of Y will be understood in the sense that there is T > 0 such that Y(t + T) = Y(t) almost everywhere in t, each such number T being called a period of Y. Assume that the circuit is stable, that is, the characteristic roots of matrix S have strictly negative real parts. There is a unique periodic solution X P (t) for (3), which we shall call the periodic solution for input Y. The general solution of (3) is the sum between X P and a solution of the homogeneous system () (). dX t SX t dt  (4) The existence and uniqueness of the periodic solution are readily established. We consider here only the case when Y is not constant, the proof being easily adapted to the other case. Since Y is periodic and not constant, it has a smallest period T such that any other of its periods is a multiple of T. Let X be any solution of (3); such a solution always exists, for instance the one given by 0 () exp( ) exp( ) () t Xt St S Y d     . The matrix exp(ST) – I is invertible as S is stable (I being the identity matrix). The function 1 ( ) ( ) exp( )(exp( ) ) ( (0) ( )) P X t X t St ST I X X T     is also a solution of (3) satisfying X P (0) = X P (T). As Y has the period T, the function X 2 (t) = X P (t+T) is again a solution of (3). Hence X 3 (t) = X 2 (t) – X P (t) is a solution of (4) that vanishes at t = 0. But such a solution must vanish everywhere; hence X P must admit T as a period. Let now X P2 be another periodic solution of (3) and let T 2 be its period. Since T 2 is also a period for the derivative of X P2 , it follows from (3) that it is a period for Y; hence T 2 must be a multiple of T and therefore a period for X P . Consequently X P2 (t) – X P (t) is a solution of (4) with period T 2 . But since S is stable, all solutions of (4) must approach 0 as t goes to infinity, implying that the mentioned periodic solution must vanish identically and hence X P2 = X P . Consider now two periodic inputs Y 1 , Y 2 (possibly with different periods) and let X P1 , X P2 be the respective periodic solutions. Suppose that up to moment t 0 , the circuit received input Y 1 and its state vector evolved according X P1 . At t 0 , the input changes from Y 1 to Y 2 . How the state vector will change? After t 0 , the state vector can be written as the sum of the periodic part X P2 (t) and a transient part TR(t) that is a solution of (4) uniquely determined by its initial value at t 0 . The latter value is in turn determined by imposing the continuity of the state vector at t 0 , expressed by the equality X P1 (t 0 ) = X P2 (t 0 ) + TR(t 0 ). Since, because of stability, every solution of (4) tends to 0 for large values of t, it follows that as times goes past t 0 , the state vector will approach the periodic solution X P2 for input Y 2 . Thus, the change of input at moment t 0 results in changing the evolution of the system from one periodic solution to another, but has also the side effect that a transient solution will manifest itself for some time after the change. The time constants of these transients are determined by the characteristic roots of S. As well known from Laplace transform theory, if one is interested in the time constants of the transients that affect an output of the system, one has to look for the roots of the denominator of the transfer function from the driving input to that output and take the inverses of the real parts of those roots, provided that the degree of the denominator equals the order of the system. RFID Readers for the HDX Protocol - A Designer’s Perspective 235 Fig. 6. Model for studying the effect of transients We apply the above remarks to the case of the HDX reader of section 3. The inverting input of the opamp internal to the decoder IC is a virtual ground. Hence one may use the simplified schematic of figure 6 for analyzing the transients that are induced whenever the tag switches from a frequency to another during data transmission to reader. In this schematic, R S is the total resistance in series with the antenna, which in this case is the series combination of R A and R MS in figure 4. Let Z A be the impedance seen by the reader antenna. According to (2), the antenna current is given by 22 () () . ()() AT T A AATT AT kLLsVs Is Ls Z Ls Z kLLs   (5) We consider the case of weak coupling, as in real situations values around 0.01 for k are common. It is therefore reasonable to approximate the above formula by () () . ()() AT T A AATT kLLsVs Is Ls Z Ls Z   (6) The tap voltage equals the above current multiplied by the parallel impedance of C A and R P . Define the series quality factor Q S = L A ω C /R S and the parallel quality factor Q P = R P C A ω C , where ω C = 2πf C and f C is the nominal frequency to which the antenna is tuned. Introducing also the normalized Laplace variable x = s/ω C , we have for the tap voltage () () , (/ )( ()) AT T TAP ACTT kLLsVs Vs Ps Ls Zs    (7) where 211 11 () ( ) 1. APSPS Px x Q Q x QQ       When the tag changes frequency, V TAP will be affected by transients whose time constants are computed by finding the roots of the denominator of the transfer function in (7). Specifically, for any such root s 0 , 0 1/Res  will be the time constant for a transient. In the limit of weak coupling, the denominator is the product of two factors, one of them depending exclusively on the tag and the other depending only on the reader antenna circuit. The reader designer has no control over the first factor and may only assume that the time constants related to it have been taken care of in the adequate way by the tag producer. The reader designer shall therefore take care of the time constants related to P A (x) and Current Trends and Challenges in RFID 236 ensure that the corresponding transients will be short enough in order not to disturb the data decoding. Provided that 11 2, PS QQ    which is usually the case, the roots of P A (x) will be complex conjugated and will produce the time constant 111 2( ) / . PS C QQ    It is reasonable to ask that the 90% - 10% decrease time of the corresponding transient, equal to 2.2 times its time constant, should be less than half of the shortest duration T B of a bit. It results that the following inequality should be imposed on the quality factors: 11 4.4 . PS CB QQ f T    (8) During the charge phase, the opamp of the decoder IC will be saturated because of the high voltage at the tap point and its inverting input will no longer function as a virtual ground. Protection diodes at the inverting input prevent the opamp to be damaged by the high voltage. In order not to exceed the current rating of the diodes, it is advisable to choose a high value for R P , resulting in a high Q P . Inequality (8) will then be satisfied if we impose πf C T B /4.4 as an upper bound for Q S . In the case of HDX protocol, T B equals 16/f C so 11.4 is an upper bound for Q S . Let us compare the above situation with the case of the reader in figure 4 working in FDX mode. Now the voltage source V R is on the reader side as in figure 1 and the tag transmits data by modulating the load Z T . The voltage at the tap point is obtained with the aid of (1): 2121 (())() () (/ )( ()) ( / ) TT R TAP ACTT TCP C Ls Z s V s Vs Ps Ls Zs kL sQ s        (9) where P A (x) is as above. In the limit of weak coupling, the denominator is again approximated by the product of two factors, one determined by the tag and the other by the reader. Transients occur when the tag changes the value of Z T . Similar considerations as above lead to the upper bound πf C T B /4.4 for Q S , where this time T B is the shortest bit duration for the FDX protocol. The latter is in general two times larger than the bit duration for HDX, resulting in a two times higher upper bound for Q S . The current for a tuned antenna circuit is given by . RSR A SAC VQV I RL   A higher antenna current means that the tag can be at a larger distance from the antenna and still receive the amount of power required for the activation of its internal circuits. Higher Q S means a higher antenna current. Since the upper bound on Q S is higher for FDX compared with HDX, it makes sense to use a lower R S for FDX. This is the reason for using the resistor R MS in figure 4. When the reader works in FDX mode, transistor M S is cut off, R MS does not play any role and Q S is determined by R A , adjusted to fulfill the upper bound for Q S in the FDX case. In the charge phase of HDX, M S is also cut off and the current is again determined by R A . Choosing the minimal allowed value for the latter would ensure the largest possible activation distance for the HDX tag. Finally, during reception of HDX data, M S is turned on and R MS is now in series with R A , lowering thus Q S in order to agree with the upper bound for HDX. A mean for increasing the antenna current without exceeding the upper bound for Q S is to decrease L A , with simultaneous decrease of R A (to RFID Readers for the HDX Protocol - A Designer’s Perspective 237 maintain the same Q S ) and increase of C A (to maintain the tuning). However, the reader designer should be aware that, as shown by (7), decreasing L A while maintaining the quality factors constant would decrease the tap voltage and hence reduce the signal received by the decoder. It is to be observed that in the FDX case, the modification in question does not change the tap voltage and the signal received from the tag at all, as proved by (9). 5. The principle of low coupling approximation We have seen above in passing from (5) to (6) that, in the limit of low coupling k, the transfer functions conveniently factor into a product of three terms, namely a transfer function that depends only on tag parameters, a transfer function that depends only on reader parameters, and the constant AT kLL. This is in fact a consequence of a general principle that we state and derive in this section. In section 7 we shall have another opportunity to apply it. Consider the interaction between the reader antenna and an HDX tag as represented in the upper left side of figure 7. The principle of low coupling approximation states that in the limit of low coupling k, the tag may be replaced with a voltage source in series with the reader antenna coil, the Laplace transform of the voltage produced by that source being given by  () . AT T TT kLLsVs Ls Z (10) For the derivation we start by replacing the coupled coils L A and L T by the equivalent circuit consisting of the leakage inductance (1 – k 2 )L A , the magnetizing inductance k 2 L A and the ideal transformer with voltage ratio /:1 AT kL L . Fig. 7. Steps in deriving the principle of low coupling approximation Current Trends and Challenges in RFID 238 In the second step we reflect to the left of the transformer everything found to its right. In this way the voltage source V T gets multiplied by the transformer voltage ratio, the impedance Z T gets multiplied by the square of the latter ratio, and we get rid of the transformer. In the third step we replace that part of the circuit enclosed in the rectangle by its Thevenin equivalent, consisting of a voltage source in series with an output impedance. In the original circuit we had a voltage source in series with a voltage divider formed by two impedances k 2 L A and k 2 (L A /L T )Z T . The new voltage source produces the voltage at the open- circuited output of the voltage divider, while the new output impedance is the parallel combination of the impedances forming the divider, and hence equals k 2 times the parallel combination Z P of L A and (L A /L T )Z T . All transformations so far were equivalent transformations and no approximation was made. The low coupling approximation comes at this final step, and consists in replacing, for low k, (1 – k 2 )L A by L A and ignoring k 2 Z P . In this way we arrive at the approximate circuit in the lower left side of figure 7. 6. Adding the HDX protocol to the FDX current-driven reader As already mentioned, the tap point connection is no longer available in the current-driven reader. The voltage-driven reader is connected via a three-wire cable to the end points and to the tap point of the antenna circuit, while the current-driven reader is connected via a two-wire cable only to the end points of the antenna circuit. Consequently, a different HDX topology is needed for the current-driven reader, which is presented in figure 8. Fig. 8. Adding the HDX protocol to the current-driven reader One remarks first that the newly added part of the schematics is connected to the existing part via two MOS transistors with low on-resistance. The transistors have their sources tied together with their parasitic diodes back-to-back so that the unwanted conduction through them is eliminated. The reader is powered from a positive source VCC and a negative source VSS. The voltage present on the antenna, which is sensed by the reader for decoding the data sent by the tag, is confined to the range from VSS to VCC. Therefore, in order to cut off both transistors, it is enough to apply the most negative voltage VSS to their gates tied together. For this reason, unlike to the voltage-driven reader where the gate of the MOS switch can be driven directly by uC, a gate driver is needed here to provide the positive voltage for turn on and the negative voltage for cut off. When the reader works in FDX mode, the transistors are cut off so that the HDX part of the schematic is isolated and plays [...]... differential voltage at the input and the voltage at the output of the opamp is given by A(s )  A0 1 s p1 (11) By definition, the gain-bandwidth product is the product between the DC gain A0 and the 3 dB frequency p1/2π Consider the opamp in the inverting configuration as in figure 10 Fig 10 Inverting amplifier Assuming that there is no current into the inverting input, the current law gives (VI – VX)/Z1... (Frumkin & Shamir, 20 09) Meanwhile, in the F-HB protocol (Cao & O’Neill, 2011), the LNP problem is first introduced to protect the forward privacy of low-cost tags The operations in the LPN problem involve the calculation of inner products of binary vectors and Bernoulli noise bit 258 Current Trends and Challenges in RFID generation Computing the binary inner product only requires bitwise AND and OR... protocol In testing a HDX system, it is important to find the behavior of the combined system reader plus antenna in response to the transition from one frequency to another Consider the interaction between reader and HDX tags as presented in figure 11 The schematic is that of 248 Current Trends and Challenges in RFID a linear system whose input is the voltage source VT internal to the tag and the output... routine reads the value of the register and stores it in memory After the whole record is stored, the uC uses the stored values as estimates of the period of the signal coming from the tag and divides the record into intervals of high, respectively low frequency, according to whether the values are below, respectively above a certain 240 Current Trends and Challenges in RFID threshold Ideally, an interval... Atmel AT91SAM7S64 Micro-Controller, 33rd ISSE Conference Proceedings, pp 2 29- 234, ISBN 97 8-83-7207-874-2, Warsaw, Poland, May 2010 Vuza, D.T., Chiţu, S & Svasta, P (2010b) An RFID Tag Simulator for the FDX and HDX Protocols, 16th SIITME 2010 Conference Proceedings, pp 53-58, ISBN 97 8-60-6551013-5, Piteşti, Romania, September 2010 254 Current Trends and Challenges in RFID Vuza, D.T & Frosch, R (2010) RFID. .. MicroelectronicMarin SA, 2005) and the HDX transponder TIRIS (Texas Instruments, 2003) Of course, many other cases can be addressed by programming the adequate software We start by describing the functioning of the analog part With reference to figure 13, FDX/HDX, FREQMOD and LOADMOD are inputs from uC while CLOCK is an output to uC As it will 244 Current Trends and Challenges in RFID be indicated below,... in simulation Fig 19 Simulation of transients in the composite system The amplifier is based on an opamp connected in the inverting configuration Two gain blocks and an RC low-pass filter are used for simulating an opamp with a DC gain of 100000 and a gain-bandwidth product of 45 MHz The reader and tag antennas are magnetically coupled, with a coupling constant k = 0.01 Figure 19 shows the schematic... gain is set by the antenna circuit In this situation one obtain the unequal amplification seen in figure 12 9. 2 Watching transients with the aid of the tag simulator In practice we may not always dispose of copies of the system and much less of identical copies We may however successively feed the inputs VIN12 and VIN2 to the same system and make use of time invariance Suppose that we first feed VIN12... before t0 and of a square wave of frequency f2 and of same amplitude after t0 Let VIN2 be the input consisting of a square wave of frequency f2 and of same amplitude as VIN12 and let VOUT12, VOUT2 be the respective outputs of the system corresponding to the defined inputs Then the transient in the system response induced by the frequency change can be obtained as the difference between VOUT12 and VOUT2,... VIN12 and VIN2 must be aligned so that they overlap after t0, that is, VIN12(t) = VIN2(t) for t ≥ t0 (figure 17) Fig 17 Alignment of input signals VIN12 (upper) and VIN2 (lower) fed simultaneously to identical copies of the system 9. 1 Watching transients with the aid of a PSpice simulation We may dispose of two identical copies of the system, which are fed simultaneously with the inputs VIN12 and VIN2 . Current Trends and Challenges in RFID 230 in (Vuza et al., 20 09) for FDX load modulation and have to be discussed again in the HDX setting, since transients manifest. and Y(t) is a periodic input. In most cases we may assume that Y is continuous but we may also allow for a discontinuous input such as a square wave. In Current Trends and Challenges in RFID. p 1 /2π. Consider the opamp in the inverting configuration as in figure 10. Fig. 10. Inverting amplifier Assuming that there is no current into the inverting input, the current law gives (V I

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